Bonus

Norms in Lebanon dictate that this attribute be [emphasize] different for each of the country’s President, Prime Minister, and Speaker of Parliament. For 10 points each:
[10e] Identify this identity category. Political scientists use the term “confessionalism” for apportionment of political power based on this attribute, as is done in Lebanon’s parliament.
ANSWER: religion [or religious identity, affiliation, sect, denomination, etc.; or faith tradition; or creed; prompt on sect; prompt on denomination; anti-prompt on Christianity or Maronite or Catholicism or Islam or Muslim or Sunni or Shi’a or Shi’ite by asking “Can you be less specific?”]
[10h] Some analyses of Lebanon use this term, popularized by Dutch-born scholar Arend Lijphart (“LIPE-hart”), for a system in which fragmented social groups are stabilized by cross-group cooperation among elites.
ANSWER: con·soci·ation·alism [or consociational democracy]
[10m] Lutfy Diab used two mixed-religion groups of Lebanese youth to recreate this 1954 study conducted in the U.S. Diab’s version canceled the “superordinate goals” stage after the groups united internally, but fought each other anyway.
ANSWER: Robbers Cave experiment [accept answers indicating the experiment in Robbers Cave State Park, Oklahoma; prompt on Intergroup Conflict and Cooperation] (by Muzafer Sherif et al.)
<Social Science>
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Conversion

TeamOpponentPart 1Part 2Part 3TotalParts
North Carolina ACornell A1001020EM

Summary

TournamentExact Match?HeardPPBEasy %Medium %Hard %
2025 ACF NationalsYes120.00100%100%0%